When you get down to the business end of the season, it becomes much more about results than performances. Scott Parker admitted as much after Fulham clung on to a precious three points last night and, given Fulham’s wretched couple of results against the teams also chasing automatic promotion since the restart, relief was certainly the order of the day.
It wasn’t a vintage victory – and when Parker and his backroom staff analyse the action, they’ll find plenty of things to work on. It was always likely to be a little hairy at the back again given that the reshaped back four only had a couple of days to work on their shape and responsibilities after the debacle at Leeds, but the manner in which things started would hardly have given anyone much confidence.
Fulham were guilty of overplaying far too close to their own goal, with Denis Odoi, who actually had a decent game at left back, attempting a ridiculous crossfield pass that put his team-mates under pressure. Michael Hector, who hasn’t been as assured as he was pre-lockdown, was drawn out of position to try to deal with Ryan Manning and while the QPR wing-back’s delivery was first class, there were further questions to ask about how Fulham failed to deal with the danger. Could Marek Rodak have come for the cross? And Tim Ream was far too easily outjumped by Jordan Hugill, adding to the sense that he has lost a bit of sharpness as well as form of late.
A fairly limited QPR side caused Fulham plenty of problems, although that won’t serve as much comfort for Mark Warburton. Hugill, a proven nuisance at this level, seemed to find time and space in front of our back four throughout – and was only denied a second before half time by a brilliant save from Rodak. Perhaps the most alarming moment of a first half that prompted several sharp intakes of breath came when another sloppy Harry Arter pass allowed QPR to break forward. Bright Osayi-Samuel skipped around Hector far too easily and seemed to lay another goal on a plate for Luke Amos, only for the midfielder to blaze over the bar. Talk about a let off.
Arter had another one of those performances that seems to defy description. He was busy and positive on the ball, but gave it away far too often, and for my money, gave the energetic Harrison Reed an awful lot to do. His goal was a fine strike from distance, although we must add the caveat that Liam Kelly will feel he should have saved it. It was good to see Kevin McDonald return in the closing stages – he’s spent far too much time on the sidelines this season and you feel his experience and leadership could prove invaluable during the run-in.
There’s still a sense that the balance of this side is not quite right. It must be said that Cyrus Christie added urgency and drive down the right flank – taking his wonderful winner with real aplomb. But there’s a big problem with a side packed with creative players failing to carve out clear-cut chances at the moment. Tom Cairney spent much of the evening in far too deep a position to threaten the QPR goal, whilst our inverted wingers were anonymous for long periods. Poor old Bobby Decordova-Reid looked like a fish out of water as a forward – his own lack of confidence summed up by his free header from a corner just before half-time that sailed over the bar.
You still feel that this squad can deliver more clinical displays in the games ahead and there was definitely an element of feeling the pressure going into a local derby on the back of two defeats. If it is to be the play-offs – and that is still by no means assured given the congested nature of the Championship table – the hope has to be that Fulham can play their way back into form over the closing weeks of this campaign to be ready for the crunch fixtures that will decide our destiny.
I’d play MacDonald ahead of Arter every time despite his lack of pace. Still think it’s worth trying three at the back as we have ready-made wingbacks in Bryan and Christie. Why wasn’t Stansfield at least on the bench? Behind closed doors should provide the perfect opportunity to give youngsters a chance without the added pressure of playing in front of a large crowd.
More questions asked than answered after QPR game
West London Sport named Cavaleiro as our best player. What match was that reporter watching?
Our only decent strikes came from Reed, Arter and Christie. Nothing of note from our “attacking” players. Knockaert, to his credit, ran his socks off but produced nothing. Cavaleiro looked as though he would rather be at home watching Netflix. Decordova Reid -the less said the better; I actually forgot he was playing and was only reminded when he was subbed off
No doubt these same players will be given yet another chance to show us what they haven’t got against Birmingham on Saturday
So frustrating for decent fans
I watched Brentford play Reading with only one thing in mind-3 points. They attacked with real intent and could have won 6-0
When will Fulham have a manager that has us playing this way?
To make things worse, our defence is looking extremely vulnerable at the worst possible time with Hector, since January our best defender, starting to wobble alarmingly
Still, if Derby (7 points behind us) can believe they have a chance of playoffs, I guess things are not so bad-or are they?
Let’s face it , Ream is very definitely off form at the moment, and Hector has one eye on Ream and the other on defending which is affecting him as well.
We are still totally ineffective in the opposition box and quite frankly were lucky to go in level at half-time.
Arter scares the life out of me – you can guarantee he will lose the ball in a dangerous position and in playing such a high-line against pacy forwards, we will lose a goal.
I saw nothing against QPR, apart from a decent performance from Christie, that led me to believe we would make the play-offs let alone the automatic places.
With the quality of players we have we should not be playing this way. Parker is draining the life out of all of them.